The owners of San Francisco's
Eagle Tavern appear to have rejected bids to buy it this week, after the
troubled bar closed over the weekend. One of the prospective buyers of the
tavern said he's done trying.

The bar, at 398 12th Street, shut
down Saturday night as the bar's owners apparently owe their landlord almost
$18,000 in rent.

Mark Frazier, who owns the Dallas
Eagle in Texas, said that he and Ron Hennis, who managed the San Francisco
Eagle, made an offer to owners John Gardiner and Joseph Banks Tuesday night to
buy the business.

He said he had told them in the
offer letter that they had until 9 p.m. Pacific time Tuesday to respond, which
they didn't. He's assuming that means they rejected the offer.

Frazier and Hennis said that
Gardiner and Banks were talking to other potential buyers, but neither of the
hopeful buyers would say whom. They also wouldn't say how much they had offered
for the business.

Frazier said he's done trying to
buy the Eagle unless an offer Gardiner and Banks were apparently working on
Wednesday falls through.

"I am not going to initiate
any more offers," said Frazier. "John and Joe both know I have an
interest, so should something happen, they can come back to me."

He had announced last week that he
was dropping out of negotiations. He said he had returned to the process,
"because I thought there was another opportunity, and I did not want to
give up on San Francisco."

The home to well-loved Sunday beer
busts, which raise money for numerous LGBT groups, Gardiner and Banks had been
trying to sell the Eagle for more than a year.

Throughout April, community
members worked to keep the bar LGBT-oriented, after it looked like it might be
sold to the owner of a different bar, raising fears the business could go
straight. That deal didn't happen.

Hennis appeared more hopeful than
Frazier on Wednesday morning. It wasn't clear that he knew Frazier was leaving
negotiations again.

He said that he hadn't heard
anything from Gardiner and Banks, but he also said, "We didn t give them a
deadline. ... If you do that, that just turns them off." He also said that
if the offer were rejected, he'd keep trying.

Hennis said that he and Frazier
had made a previous offer Sunday, but "They said it wasn't enough."

Late last week, as word began
circulating that the Eagle's days were quickly drawing to a close, some patrons
hoped a solution could be found.

Parrel "Pipeman"
Mortimer, a regular, said that for him and many others there is no bar that can
replace the Eagle, which he called a "community treasure."

There was a full house on
Saturday, April 30, the bar's last night.

Behind on rent

It appears the Eagle has
experienced financial difficulties for some time.

According to the unlawful detainer
complaint filed in San Francisco Superior Court on April 19, Gardiner and
Banks, who own the liquor license, owe $17,767 in rent on the bar. Landlord
John Nikitopoulos filed the complaint through the San Francisco firm Lipton,
Piper and Sganga, LLP.

The court documents list the
Constantinos I. and Anthanasia Nikitopoulos Trust as the plaintiff. John
Nikitopoulos is the trustee.

The summons that accompanies the
eviction complaint says the owners had five calendar days to respond in
writing, which court records indicate they haven't done. The summons says,
"If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by
default," and property may be taken "without further warning from the
court."

According to the court documents,
which the Bay Area Reporter examined,
Gardiner and Banks, operating as Hole in the Wall Saloon Inc., had agreed to
pay $7,525 a month for the period beginning April 1, 2005 and ending March 31,
2010. The documents include a copy of the lease.

The agreement had been increased
to $8,691.98 beginning September 1, 2010, according to the complaint.

The documents indicate that on
March 7, 2011, a notice to pay rent or quit was delivered to Gardiner and
another was posted at the Eagle.

In a letter dated that same day,
attorney Jonathan L. Piper said partial rent payments had been made, but about
$9,076 was still due for the period December 2010 through March 2011.

The letter said that within three
days after the document was served to Gardiner and Banks, they were to pay the
rent or hand over the premises, or legal proceedings would be brought to
recover possession of the premises and recover rents and damages.

The complaint lists the fair
rental value of the premises as $289 per day. The complaint says that
Nikitopoulos is requesting possession of the premises and costs including
past-due rent of $17,767; attorney fees; and damages at the rate of $289 for
each day Gardiner and Banks "remain in possession through entry of
judgment."

Gardiner, who didn't respond to
interview requests for this story, previously said that the bar's lease expired
more than a year ago, so "I guess it goes month to month." Banks also
didn't respond to an interview request.